Euglesa Jenyns, 1832

Bespalaya, Yulia V., Vinarski, Maxim V., Aksenova, Olga V., Babushkin, Evgeniy S., Gofarov, Mikhail Yu., Kondakov, Alexander V., Konopleva, Ekaterina S., Kropotin, Alexander V., Mabrouki, Youness, Ovchankova, Nadezda B., Palatov, Dmitry M., Sokolova, Svetlana E., Shevchenko, Alexander R., Travina, Oksana V., Taybi, Abdelkhaleq F., Soboleva, Alena A., Zubrii, Natalia A. & Bolotov, Ivan N., 2024, Phylogeny, taxonomy, and biogeography of the Sphaeriinae (Bivalvia: Sphaeriidae), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 201 (2), pp. 305-338 : 322-323

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad139

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DC94015-12D0-42CB-B21E-F7C950E94EFDEuglesa

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13220102

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D887B7-182B-FFE5-3EFB-F8D2A5CA1B85

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Euglesa Jenyns, 1832
status

 

Genus Euglesa Jenyns, 1832 View in CoL

Type species: Tellina pusilla W. Turton, 1819 (non Tellina pusilla Lamarck, 1806 ) = Euglesa personata (Malm, 1855) .

Diagnosis: This genus comprises not less than 35 valid species ( Table 1 View Table 1 ). The shell is small sized (min–max shell length 2.5– 6.0 mm). The beaks are shifted to the posterior edge or located near the middle of the shell ( Figs 5A View Figure 5 , 6A View Figure 6 ). Similar to Pisidium , only the exhalant siphon and a branchial mantle opening are present in the species of this genus. The branchial siphon is reduced. The outer demibranch (with certain reduction) and inner demibranch usually present ( Fig. 7A View Figure 7 ). In addition, some species are characterized by a very small outer demibranch, as well as its complete reduction. For example, both states of this character were observed in the North American species Euglesa compressa ( Korniushin and Glaubrecht 2002) .

Reproductive biology: This genus is characterized as synchronous brooders (embryos are developing within a distinct brood sac).

Distribution: The genus has wide (subcosmopolitan) distribution, covering Eurasia, Africa, North America, and Australia, including high-altitude and high-latitude regions ( Fig. 3B View Figure 3 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Sphaeriida

Family

Sphaeriidae

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